key: cord-0745096-90nkyywp authors: Burzynska, Katarzyna; Contreras, Gabriela title: Gendered effects of school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic date: 2020-06-12 journal: Lancet DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(20)31377-5 sha: 58a4a2b21b028f229bf55e410a2d98236497f425 doc_id: 745096 cord_uid: 90nkyywp nan The first issue relates to sexual and reproductive health aspects, where teenage girls might disproportionately drop out of school due to an increased risk of sexual exploitation, pregnancy, and (forced) marriage. School closures during the Ebola outbreak were asso ciated with an increase in teenage pregnancies. 2 Once schools reopened, many "visibly pregnant girls" 2 were banned from going back to school. With schools closing throughout the developing world, where stigma around teenage pregnancies prevails, we will probably see an increase in dropout rates as teenage girls become pregnant or married. The second issue relates to socioeconomic aspects, where girls might spend less time studying or might drop out of school at higher rates than boys because of a disproportionate increase in unpaid household work. Girls aged 5-14 years already spend 40% more time doing household work than boys do. 3 As girls stay at home because of school closures, their household work burdens might increase, resulting in girls spending more time helping out at home instead of studying. This might encourage parents, particularly those putting a lower value on girls' education, to keep their daughters at home even after schools reopen. Moreover, research shows that girls risk dropping out of school when caregivers are missing from the household because they typically have to (partly) replace the work done by the missing caregiver, 4 who might be away due to COVID19related work, illness, or death. Therefore, with the current COVID19 pandemic, we might see more girls than boys helping at home, lagging behind with studying, and dropping out of school. We warn that school closures in this COVID19 pandemic may bolster gender gaps in education and girl empowerment dampening any prog ress already made, particularly in developing countries. We call for public acknowledgment and discussion about the adverse effects school closures can have on widening of the schooling gap between girls and boys. We call for a gendered perspective in developing policy responses by tackling the sexual and reproductive health and socioeconomic issues addressed here to bring girls back to school after the measures to contain the COVID19 pandemic end. We also ask governments to collect data specifically on nonpaid housework and childcare respon sibilities frequently ignored when investigating the consequences of child labour. Addressing the health and socioeconomic issues girls might face during this pandemic, as well as collecting data to quantify their effects, are important in honouring the commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals. Centring sexual and reproductive health and justice in the global COVID19 response The health impact of the 2015 Ebola outbreak Girls spend 160 million more hours than boys doing household chores everyday Effects of household and districtlevel factors on primary school enrollment in 30 developing countries